Abstract
Nearly three decades of research evaluating the impact of family
structure on the health and well-being of children demonstrates
that children living with their married, biological parents
consistently have better physical, emotional, and academic
well-being. Pediatricians and society should promote the family
structure that has the best chance of producing healthy children.
The best scientific literature to date suggests that, with the
exception of parents faced with unresolvable marital violence,
children fare better when parents work at maintaining the marriage.
Consequently, society should make every effort to support healthy
marriages and to discourage married couples from divorcing.
Keywords: Divorce, Children, Emotional well being, Society
Epidemiology
The demographics of families are changing, and with that, the
philosophical underpinnings of relationships are also changing.
Many young adults feel marriage is old-fashioned and confining, and
that open cohabitating relationships provide a healthier option
that is more conducive to personal development. If a relationship
does not provide personal happiness, parents often believe that
their children will adapt to new family relationships so that
divorce or separation will have few long-term, adverse
consequences. These beliefs have led to marriage occurring later,
women having fewer children and doing so later in life, single
mothers giving birth to many of our children, more parents
cohabitating, and fewer children living with their married,
biologic parents.
In 1960, the average age of a woman's first marriage was 20.3
years; that of men was 22.8 years. But by 2010, that changed so
that the median age at first marriage was 25.8 years for women and
28.3 years for men (Copen et al. 2012). In 1960, the rate of
marriage for women was 76.5 per 10,000, but this had decreased to
37.4 per 10,000 by 2008. The birth rate for the United States is
now so low that it is below replacement rate, and 41 percent of all
births in 2009 were to unmarried women. Nearly one in five births
to women in their thirties was non-marital in 2007, compared with
one in seven in 2002.
Children's lives track with these statistics. In 1970, 84
percent of children lived with their married biologic parents,
whereas by 2009, only 60 percent did so. In 2009, only 29 percent
of African-American children lived with their married biologic
parents, while 50 percent were living in single-mother homes.
Furthermore, 58 percent of Hispanic children lived with married
biologic parents, while 25 percent were living in single-mother
homes. Importantly, a recent Harvard study on single-parent
families revealed that the most prominent factor preventing many
children from upward mobility is living with a single parent
(Chetty et al. 2014).
In addition, the number of couples who choose to cohabit rather
than marry has increased dramatically, with 4.9 million cohabiting
couples in 2002, versus just 500,000 in 1970 (U.S. Census Bureau
2003). Half of the unmarried births are to mothers who are in
cohabitating relationships, and seven in ten children of
cohabitating couples will experience parental separation. The
dissolution rate of cohabitating couples is four times higher than
married couples who did not cohabitate before marriage (Osborne,
Manning, and Stock 2007).
The Centers for Disease Control stopped gathering complete data
on the number of children affected by divorce in 1988, and at that
time more than one million children were affected (Cohen 2002).
Since then, the incidence of divorce has continued to climb, and
according to the 2009 American Community Survey, only 45.8 percent
of children reach age 17 years while still living with their
biologic parents who were married before or around the time of the
child's birth (Fagan and Zill 2011). The majority of divorces
affect younger children since 72 percent of divorces occur during
the first 14 years of marriage. Because a high percentage of
divorced adults remarry, and 40 percent of these remarriages also
end in divorce, children may be subjected to multiple family
realignments (Cohen 2002).
The precipitating causes of divorce have also changed over time.
Prior to no-fault divorce laws, the legal procedures for obtaining
a divorce were often difficult and expensive, so that only the most
dysfunctional marriages ended in divorce. Children who are removed
from the most dysfunctional environments are more likely to do
better after the divorce. However, with the introduction of
no-fault divorce laws, it is likely that the child has not
experienced severe levels of parental discord, so the divorce has
more adverse effects on the child. One study seems to conclude that
the majority of more recent divorces were not preceded by an
extended period of marital conflict (Amato and Booth 1997 as quoted
in Amato 2001).
Divorce and parental separation are damaging to children,
families, the economy, and society as a whole, and this paper
outlines these adverse effects. While recognizing that not all
children or parents will experience every negative consequence
listed below, given the seriousness of these adverse outcomes and
the magnitude of the issue, it is important that pediatricians
support public policies that promote the health and preservation of
the child's biologic family.
Evaluating the Literature
When evaluating the scientific research on the effects of
divorce on children and parents, it is important to consider all of
the factors affecting the outcome, including family dynamics,
children's temperaments and ages at the time of divorce, and family
socioeconomic status, as well as any behavioral or academic
concerns present prior to divorce. Some adverse effects noted in
the literature after divorce are actually diminished when
controlled for their presence prior to divorce. It is also
important to note that violence in a home is never acceptable and
can have serious adverse effects on children's behavior,
development, academic success, and future health.
Effects of Divorce on Children
Each child and each family are obviously unique, with different
strengths and weaknesses, different personalities and temperaments,
and varying degrees of social, emotional, and economic resources,
as well as differing family situations prior to divorce. Despite
these differences, divorce has been shown to diminish a child's
future competence in all areas of life, including family
relationships, education, emotional well-being, and future earning
power. One review of the literature conducted in the United Kingdom
found that “although children are at increased risk of adverse
outcomes following family breakdown and that negative outcomes can
persist into adulthood, the difference between children from intact
and non-intact families is a small one, and the majority of
children will not be adversely affected in the long-term” (Mooney,
Oliver, and Smith 2009). There is much research, however, that
offers evidence to the contrary.
Two large meta-analyses, one reported in 1991 and the other
reported ten years later in 2001, showed that “children with
divorced parents continued to score significantly lower on measures
of academic achievement, conduct, psychological adjustment,
self-concept, and social relations” (Amato and Keith 1991; Amato
and Booth 1997 as quoted in Amato 2001).
This research demonstrates that, when a child experiences
parental divorce, there are significant losses that must be
acknowledged.
The child may lose time with each parent
- 1. Parents must adjust to their own losses as well as to their
new role as a divorced parent. Thus, parents may not have as much
emotional strength and time to invest in parenting, i.e., the
parents experience a “moratorium on parenting.”
- 2. Although laws are gradually changing, most children spend
more time with one custodial parent and obviously have less time
with each parent overall.
- 3. For most children, this means much less time spent with
their fathers.
- 4. The child may also spend less time with their mother as she
may need to work longer hours to support the family.
The child may lose economic security
- 1. Custodial mothers experience the loss of 25–50 percent of
their pre-divorce income.
- a. Women who divorced in the past 12 months were more likely to
receive public assistance than divorced men (23% versus 15%) (U.S.
Census Bureau 2011).
- b. Even five years after the divorce, mothers who remain single
have only risen to 94 percent of their pre-divorce income, while
continuously married couples have increased their income.
- c. In 2000, the median income of single-mother households was
47 percent that of married-couple households (American Academy of
Pediatrics 2003).
- 2. Only 50 percent of custodial mothers have child support
agreements, and 25 percent of mothers who have been granted support
receive no payments.
- 3. Custodial fathers also experience financial loss; although
they tend to recover financially more quickly and rarely receive
child support.
- 4. Loss of income may lead to increased work time for parents,
as well as a change in residence.
- 5. Children living with single mothers are much more likely
to live in poverty than children living with both married
parents (Edwards 2014).
- a. In 2009, children living with a divorced parent were more
likely to live in a household below the poverty level (28%)
compared with other children (19%) (U.S. Census Bureau 2011).
- 6. Unmarried women are more likely to remain in
povertycompared with married individuals and unmarried men
(Edwards 2014).
- a. Approximately 32.2 percent of people in single-mother
families in poverty during the first two months of 2009 continued
to be in poverty for 36 months. In contrast, only 18.7 percent of
people in married-couple families in poverty during this same time
remained in poverty for 36 months.
- 7. Children living with single parents are less likely to
experience upward financial mobility.
- a. The fraction of children living in single-parent households
is the strongest negative correlate of upward income mobility
according to one study (Chetty et al. 2014).
- b. The percentage of married families in a community also
contributes to future upward economic mobility of all children in
the community (Chetty et al. 2014).
The child may lose emotional security(Amato and
Afifi 2006)
- 1. The child may have a weakened relationship with his/her
mother.
- a. Divorced mothers are less able to provide emotional support
(Miller and Davis 1997).
- 2. The child may have a weakened relationship with his/her
father.
- a. Divorced fathers spend less time with their children.
- b. A study in 1996 found that fewer than half of children
living with a divorced mother had seen their fathers at all in more
than one year, and only one in six saw their fathers once a week
(Popenoe 1996, as quoted in Fagan and Churchill 2012, 6).
- c. Divorced fathers are rated as less caring by their
adolescents (Dunlop, Burns, and Bermingham 2001).
- d. The child may find it more difficult to trust his/her father
(King 2002).
- 3. The child may have a weakened relationship with grandparents
or relatives—especially the parents of the noncustodial parent
(Kruk and Hall 1995).
- 4. The child may lose family traditions, celebrations, and
daily routines. Even adult children whose adult parents divorced
later in life experienced the loss of family traditions and
disruption of celebrations (Pett, Lang, and Gander 1992).
- 5. The change in residence may lead to loss of friends, school
environment, and other support systems.
The child may have decreased social and psychological
maturation
- 1. College students whose parents were divorced were more
likely to experience verbal aggression and violence from their
partner during conflict resolution (Billingham and Notebaert
1993).
- 2. Children of divorced parents may have lower scores on
self-concept and social relations (Amato 2001).
- 3. Anxiety and depression seem to worsen after the divorce
event (Strohschein 2005).
The child may change his or her outlook on sexual
behavior
- 1. There is increased approval (by children of divorced
parents) of premarital sex, cohabitation, and divorce (Jeynes
2001).
- 2. There is earlier sexual debut (Jónsson et al. 2000).
- 3. Girls whose fathers left the home before they were five
years old were eight times more likely to become pregnant as
adolescents than girls from intact families (Ellis et al.
2003).
- 4. Boys similarly have earlier sexual debut and higher rates of
sexually transmitted disease when they have experienced divorce in
their family.
- 5. As adults, the female children of divorced parents
experience less trust and satisfaction in romantic relationships
(Jacquet and Surra 2001).
- 6. The children of divorced parents are less likely to view
marriage as permanent and less likely to view it as a lifelong
commitment (Weigel 2007).
- 7. The children of divorced parents are two to three times more
likely to cohabit and to do so at younger ages (Amato and Booth
1997, 112, as quoted in Fagan and Churchill 2012, 26).
The child may lose his/her religious faith and practice
(Myers 1996)
- 1. Following a divorce, children are more likely to abandon
their faith (Feigelman, Gorman, and Varacalli 1992).
- 2. As adults, those raised in step-families are less likely to
be religious than those raised by both biologic parents (Myers
1996).
- 3. Since religious practice has benefits in areas such as
sexual restraint, the child of divorce may lose this protection
(Rostosky, Regnerus, and Wright 2003).
The child may lose cognitive and academic
stimulation
- 1. Children in divorced homes have less language
stimulation.
- 2. Children of divorced parents are more likely to have lower
grade point averages (GPAs) and be asked to repeat a year of school
(Jeynes 2000).
- 3. A study of eleven industrialized countries showed that
children living in two-parent families had higher math and science
scores (Jeynes 2000).
- 4. Children in single-mother families were twice as likely to
have been absent from school for eleven or more days in the past
year due to illness or injury (6%) compared with children in
two-parent families (3%) (Pong, Dronkers, and ampden-Thompson
2003).
- 5. Children of married parents attained higher income levels as
adults.
The child may be less physically healthy
- 1. Fewer children in nuclear families were considered to be in
poor health than children in non-nuclear families (12% of children
in nuclear family versus 22% of children of single parent)
(CDC/NCHS National Health Interview Survey 2012).
- a. Emergency room usage is higher for children in all other
family types over that experienced by children in nuclear families
(Family Structure and Children's Health in the United States
2010).
- b. Children in nuclear families were less likely than children
in other family types to have a learning disability or attention
deficit/hyperactivity disorder regardless of parents' education,
income, or area of residence (Family Structure and Children's
Health in the United States 2010).
- 2. Children living with married parents are less likely to be
abused or neglected. In one study, the relative risk that children
from a single-parent family would be physically abused or neglected
more than doubled (Family Structure and Children's Health in the
United States 2010).
The child may have a higher risk of emotional
distress
- 1. A study of almost one million children in Sweden
demonstrated that children growing up with single parents were more
than twice as likely to experience a serious psychiatric disorder,
commit or attempt suicide, or develop an alcohol addiction (Brown
et al. 1998).
- 2. Children of single parents are twice as likely to have
emotional and behavioral problems—8 percent versus 4 percent for
children from two parent households (Kelleher et al.
2000;Ringsback-Weitoft et al. 2003).
- 3. The CDC reported on adverse family experiences among
children in nonparental care. The study found, “Children living
with one biological parent were between 3 and 8 times as likely as
children living with two biological parents to have experienced
neighborhood violence, caregiver violence, or caregiver
incarceration or to have lived with a caregiver with mental illness
or an alcohol or drug problem” (Bramlett and Radel 2014).
Effects of Divorce on Parents
Parents who divorce also experience adverse effects on their
physical, emotional, and financial well-being, which may also in
turn affect their children.
Married (male/female) people are more likely to have better
physical health
- 1. Married people smoke and drink less (ChildStats.gov
2013).
- 2. Married men are less likely to commit suicide than men who
are divorced or separated (Schoenborn 2004).
- 3. Married individuals have the lowest incidence of diabetes,
hypertension, and heart disease (Kposowa 2000).
- 4. Married men are more likely to live longer after a diagnosis
of cancer, especially prostate cancer (Pienta 2000).
- 5. Married men live longer than men who never married.
- a. In the Framingham Offspring Study, married men had a 46
percent lower rate of dying from cardiovascular disease than
unmarried men (Goodwin et al. 1987).
Married (male/female) people are more likely to have higher
incomes
- 1. Individuals who are married have greater wealth.
- 2. The longer they stay married, the greater the wealth
accumulation (Marriage and Men's Health 2010).
- 3. Men especially benefit, as married men earn 22 percent more
than single men (Waite and Gallagher 2000, 97–123).
- 4. Women who experience divorce face a 27 percent decrease in
their standard of living (Stratton 2002).
Married women are more likely to be physically safer than
divorced or separated women
- 1. Married and widowed women experienced less intimate partner
violence than divorced or separated women.1
Married individuals are more likely to be involved in their
community
- 1. Married people have more civic responsibility, are more
likely to volunteer in service projects, and are more likely to be
involved in schools and churches (National Crime Victimization
Survey 2012).
Divorce may have adverse long-term emotional effects for
parents
- 1. In Wallerstein's long-term study, half of the women and
one-third of the men were still very angry with their former
spouses (Keyes 2002).
- 2. One-third of the women and one-fourth of the men felt that
life was unfair and disappointing (Wallerstein and Blakeslee
2004).
- 3. In only 10 percent of divorces did both partners feel they
achieved happier lives (Wallerstein and Blakeslee 2004, 29).
- 4. One-fourth of the older divorced men remained isolated and
lonely (Wallerstein and Blakeslee 2004, 40).
One study demonstrated that those who were unhappy in their
marriage when first surveyed, but remained married, were likely to
have an improved relationship and be happier five years later than
those who divorced (Wallerstein and Blakeslee 2004, 45).
Effects of Divorce on Society
Divorce adversely affects society by
- 1. Diminishing the child's future competence.
- 2. Weakening the family structure.
- 3. Contributing to early sexual experimentation leading to
increased costs for society.
- 4. Adversely affecting religious practice—divorce diminishes
the frequency of religious worship.
- 5. Diminishing a child's learning capacity and educational
attainment.
- 6. Reducing the household income.
- 7. Increasing crime rates and substance use, with associated
societal and governmental costs (Waite and Gallagher 2000).
- 8. Increasing risk for school suspensions, “Persons in Need of
Supervision” status, binge drinking, and marijuana use (Demuth and
Brown 2004; Eckenrode, Mrcynyszyn, and Evans 2008; Osborne,
Manning, and Stock 2007).
- 9. Increasing emotional and mental health risks, including
suicide.
Studies have attempted to estimate the financial cost of divorce
to the United States, with most recent estimates reaching $33.3
billion per year, and with adolescent pregnancy costing at least $7
billion (Schramm 2003).
Conclusion
There are clearly negative long-term consequences of
divorce—children, parents, and society all suffer. Wallerstein's
long-term study shows that many children never have full “recovery”
as each special event, holiday, or celebration reminds the child of
his/her loss. Given these tremendous costs borne by all individuals
affected by divorce, as well as the costs to society, it is the
responsibility of physicians—especially pediatricians, who care for
children in the context of their families—to advocate for public
health policies that promote marriage and decrease the likelihood
of divorce.
Acknowledgements
The American College of Pediatricians is a national
organization of pediatricians and other healthcare professionals
dedicated to the health and well-being of children. Formed in 2002,
the College is committed to fulfilling its mission by producing
sound policy, based on the best available research, to assist
parents and to influence society in the endeavor of child rearing.
Membership is open to qualifying healthcare professionals who share
the College's Mission, Vision and Values. The home office is in
Gainesville, Florida, the website is http://www.acpeds.org and the
office telephone number is 888-376-1877.
Biography
•
Dr. Jane Anderson is a Clinical Professor of Pediatrics at the
University of California, San Francisco, where she practiced for 33
years until her retirement in November, 2012. She continues there
as a volunteer faculty member. She has authored numerous articles
on general pediatric topics, has presented lectures on adolescent
brain development and parenting in both the US and China, and has
received teaching awards from medical students and pediatric
residents, including the 2014 Volunteer Faculty Teaching Award from
the pediatric residents at the University of California, San
Francisco. Dr. Anderson provided testimony on behalf of Alaska’s
parental notification law demonstrating in her testimony that
parental notification is in the best interest of adolescents, and
the judge upheld the law.
She has been married to her husband, Karl, for 39 years, and has
four children. She participates annually in short-term medical
missions trips with Medical Servants International, and is on the
Board of Directors of the National Physician Center. She has been a
member of the American College of Pediatricians since 2002 and
currently serves on its Board.
Endnote
1Stroup and Pollock (1994) and Peterson (1996). Peterson's data
showed a 30% income decrease for women, but a 10% increase for
men.
Article information
Linacre Q. November, 2014; 81(4): 378–387.
doi: [10.1179/0024363914Z.00000000087]
PMCID: PMC4240051
PMID: 25473135
Jane Anderson*
University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA
*American College of Pediatricians, May 2014. Used with
permission (http://www.acpeds.org).
Copyright © Catholic Medical Association 2014
This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.
Articles from The Linacre Quarterly are provided here courtesy
of SAGE Publications
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